JP Morgan Gold and Silver Hoarding - A Specific Peculiarity

For years, we've watched JP Morgan stockpile what is alleged to be physical gold and silver in their COMEX vaults. However, something has changed over the past four months and we thought we should bring this to your attention today.

First some background...

During the silver price run-up of 2011, JP Morgan was seemingly caught flat-footed. They appeared to hold a massive paper short position while simultaneously holding no visible physical position. At the time, JPM did not have a COMEX silver vault and, as the CFTC-generated Commitment of Traders data showed at the time, the last $10 of price surge was almost entirely due to a "commercial" short squeeze. The most likely "commercial" being squeezed in April of 2011? JP Morgan.

After starting from ZERO in 2011, JPM has quickly amassed a horde of COMEX silver and now has a virtual stranglehold and monopoly on this "market". As of last Friday, JPM's COMEX silver vault held 112.5 million ounces versus a total COMEX vault of 213.3 million ounces. This means that JPM now holds/controls nearly 53% of all silver backing the COMEX silver paper derivative exchange.

To help you better understand the scope of this, check these next two charts (click to enlarge). First, here's an old COMEX silver stocks report from June 3, 2011. Note the following:

Prior to JPM's inclusion in 2011, there had only been FOUR COMEX silver depositories.

After the first 60 days or so, JPM had only brought in 750,761 ounces, all of it marked "eligible".

The total amount of silver held in all vaults was just 100,535,272 ounces.

This next chart I found on Twitter over the weekend and it comes from the always helpful Nick Laird. It shows in dramatic fashion the rising dominance of JPM and their silver vault on the COMEX:

JPM seems to have largely amassed this horde through the steady acquisition of silver through the bi-monthly "delivery" process on the COMEX. If we check the records since 2015, we see this play out. While only rarely issuing a contract, the House or proprietary account of JPM has consistently stopped (taken) "deliveries" since March of 2015. See below:

March15: JPM House stopped the position limit of 1,500 contracts. At 5,000 ounces/contract, this represents "delivery" of 7,500,000 ounces.

May15: 808 stops for 4,040,000 ounces

July15: 1,161 for 5,805,000 ounces

Sept15: 370 for 1,850,000 ounces

Dec15: 1,400 for 7,000,000 ounces

March16: 1,076 for 5,380,000 ounces

May16: 1,500 for 7,500,000 ounces

July16: 771 for 3,855,000 ounces

Sept16: 405 for 2,025,000 ounces

Dec16: 1,550 (50 contracts in excess of the 1,500 limit) for 7,750,000 ounces.

Adding this all together gives us a total 2015-2016 stoppage of 10,541 contracts for 52,705,000 ounces of silver. Over the same time period, JPM House issued just 342 contracts for 1,710,000 ounces. So, on a NET basis, the House account of JP Morgan accumulated almost precisely 51,000,000 ounces of silver in their COMEX Vault over the time period of 2015-2016.

This hoarding continued into 2017 when JPM House stopped a whopping 2,689 contracts back in March. This represents a "delivery" of 13,445,000 ounces and is clearly WELL IN EXCESS of the stated COMEX front and delivery month position limit of 1,500 contracts. We wrote about this at the time and even went so far as to file a complaint form through the CFTC website. You can read all about it here: https://www.tfmetalsreport.com/blog/8243/march-comex-silver-deliveries

Well a curious thing has occurred in the time since. After illegally stopping 2,689 contracts in March, the House account of JP Morgan stopped a grand total of ZERO COMEX silver contracts in May and, thus far in July, they've once again stopped a total of ZERO.

Now why would this be? Does JPM finally feel as if they have enough silver? Did their violations back in March result in a slap in the wrist from the CFTC? Who can say for certain? What's clear, however, is that with a physical horde of 107,000,000 ounces in their eligible vault, JPM now has enough silver to physically settle and cover 21,400 COMEX contracts should they ever begin to get squeezed again as they did in 2011. (This of course assumes that the entire 107MM ounces is owned/controlled by the JPM House account.)

Adding more intrigue to the question, however, is what we're also seeing in COMEX gold. In 2015, the House account of JPM was actually a NET issuer of COMEX gold contracts. Some months they issued and some months they stopped (took "delivery") and the result was an issuance of 1,109 COMEX gold contracts for NET loss of 110,900 ounces of gold. This changed in 2016 though as the JPM House account ended up with a NET stoppage of precisely 8,000 COMEX contracts for 800,000 ounces.

This continued into 2017 with February seeing 771 stops for a total of 77,100 more ounces. And then a curious thing happened here, too. The House account of JPM had a total of ZERO activity in April. No stops and no issuances. And then, when June came around, it happened again! No June gold stops and no June gold issuances! What the heck??

And so here we are. After being an active collector and hoarder of "physical" gold and silver through the bi-monthly COMEX delivery process, the activity of the House account of JPM has suddenly come to a grinding and complete FULL STOP. And the question is: WHY? Why, after participating in every gold and silver "delivery" month for years, has the JPM House account suddenly ceased all activity? Again, are they "full"? Has the CFTC slapped a penalty upon them for repeatedly exceeding delivery month position limits?

Most importantly, what if anything might this mean for price? Has JPM conspired to keep prices low for years so that they could acquire metal as inexpensively as possible? Maybe. And, now that they appear to be "done", might price finally be allowed to rise? Again, maybe.

Unfortunately, all we can do is speculate. The actual answers will very likely never be known as the only thing that remains constant in the world of the paper derivative pricing scheme is the deliberate opacity of the process.

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